> You are severely overestimating peoples desire to have something strapped to their face all day
How many people wear glasses?
If you haven't tried the Hololens2 you haven't the context to evaluate the potential for the tech. I let my non-technical sister try it for 30 minutes and her response was "This is so cool! I'm going to go tell my friends I just tried the future!"
There are plenty of professional use cases for AR. Having a HUD or contextual menus next to physical objects will be highly useful. Doctors, assembly, construction, factories, navigation... the list is long. The Snap device is a much cheaper, though limited by comparison, device and people are finding uses in fitness.
Also, with no more need to have touch screens on every device, the cost savings will be huge
How many people wear glasses?
If you haven't tried the Hololens2 you haven't the context to evaluate the potential for the tech. I let my non-technical sister try it for 30 minutes and her response was "This is so cool! I'm going to go tell my friends I just tried the future!"
There are plenty of professional use cases for AR. Having a HUD or contextual menus next to physical objects will be highly useful. Doctors, assembly, construction, factories, navigation... the list is long. The Snap device is a much cheaper, though limited by comparison, device and people are finding uses in fitness.
Also, with no more need to have touch screens on every device, the cost savings will be huge